This John Custis emigrated to the Virginia Colony, probably from Rotterdam in 1649 or 1650. By that date, his sister Ann had become the second wife of the widower
Argall Yeardley, the son of
George Yeardley (who became governor of the Virginia colony and died there in 1627). Ann's husband was not only a prominent planter on
Virginia's Eastern Shore but had already served nearly a decade on the Virginia Governor's Council. Ann Custis probably sailed across the Atlantic Ocean with John Custis and their kinsman Henry Norwood, who left in a sloop from Argoll Yeardley's house for
Jamestown. After emigrating to the Virginia colony, Custis became a merchant and landowner. In 1650, Argall Yeardley issued him a certificate for 600 acres of land. In the 1650s, Custis also began holding important local offices, including as surveyor and appraiser of estates. Complicating matters, in 1674, King Charles had granted the right to collect
quitrents from all of Virginia except the
Northern Neck of Virginia to favorites
Henry Bennett (Earl of Arlington) and
Thomas Culpeper, so the Virginia General Assembly later that year petitioned the King asking him to reverse the grant, which seemed the equivalent of additional taxes upon already financially strapped colonists, but received an equivocal answer. After fleeing Jamestown in late July 1676, during
Bacon's Rebellion, Governor Berkeley took refuge at
Arlington plantation, the grand house this John Custis had erected earlier that decade in what had become Northampton County, possibly because sandbars on Old Plantation Creek forced larger ships to anchor well out to sea and made landing enemy troops difficult (and thus made it defensible). Some time before July 5, 1677, after governor Berkeley had sailed to England and died, Lieutenant governor (and commissioner) Herbert Jeffrys appointed Custis to the Virginia Governor's Council, and he continued to sit as an additional member of the Accomack and Northampton County Courts. However, somehow his name was omitted from the list of Council members when
Francis Howard was appointed governor in October 1683, so Custis petitioned the Crown for reinstatement in 1685. ==Personal life==